Sunday, April 21, 2019

Lanett woman wins case over mishandled conservatorship

Pictured is Barbi Agricola, owner of Agricola Law in Opelika, left, and
Shelbie Hunt, who recently was awarded fund from an insurance agency due
to mishandling of a conservatorship in Chambers County. Hunt is holding
her 4 month old daughter Amelia.

By Dustin Duncan

LANETT — Three years ago, Lanett native Shelbie Hunt
was mourning the loss of her grandmother, when she came across a
surprising discovery — several bank documents with her name on it.

After a long legal battle, Hunt was awarded an
undisclosed amount of money in March due to the mishandling of funds
left to her in a conservatorship by her father, who died in 2000. The
court case involved the Chambers County Probate Office, Farmers and
Merchants Bank and several attorneys.

A conservatorship is a legal concept through which
financial affairs for one person are managed by a guardian or protector
appointed by a judge.

The account that had been left to Hunt had been
closed by the time Hunt discovered its existence in 2016. Her
grandmother, who was in charge of the account, had depleted the funds
while Hunt was a minor.

Hunt’s father died when she was 4 years old, and the
conservatorship was set up in 2001. According to Hunt’s attorney, Barbi
Agricola, owner of Agricola Law in Opelika, when a conservatorship is
set up for a minor, Alabama law said there has to be a person in charge
of that account until the minor reaches 19 years of age.

Agricola said the account was set up properly at the
bank, along with a certificate of deposit, and the grandmother was
appointed as the conservator, but the account was in Hunt’s name.

In 2016, Hunt reached the age where the funds would
be awarded to her, but she told the Valley Times-News Thursday she had
no knowledge of the account until after her grandmother passed away that
same year.

Once she found the documents, which used her maiden
name Shelbie McDougall, she went to the bank to get answers. Hunt said
the bank refused to give her any information about the account that was
set up in her name because it was already closed and the funds were
depleted.

Hunt then went to the probate judge’s office to
request documents about the conservatorship and said former probate
judge Brandi Easlick told her she would have to request an accounting
hearing on the account. Eastlick could not be reached for comment on
Friday.

According to court documents, the probate office
ordered an accounting of the conservatorship to be produced in June 2017
at a hearing, but because the conservator was deceased at the time, no
accounting was done.

At that point, Hunt attempted to hire a lawyer. She
said she went to four attorneys in Chambers County, but all refused to
represent her. In 2018, she went Agricola Law, which took her case.

Once the law firm was involved, it was discovered
the account was not called upon for accounting or inventory from 2001 to
2016. Agricola said under Alabama law, the conservator is required to
do annual accounting of any expenditures of the funds to the probate
court.

“The burden is on the conservator, but if the
conservator does not do it, the burden shifts to the probate’s office to
order and ensure that this is done properly,” Agricola said.

The firm also contacted the bank, which at the time
said it would provide statements to Hunt for $5 a page. Hunt said
purchases made from the account were for everyday expenses from stores
such as Family Dollar, Belk’s and Fred’s.

“She treated it like her living account,” Hunt said.

The main office of Farmer’s and Merchant’s Bank in LaFayette declined to comment.

Hunt said she didn’t live with her grandmother, nor
was she cared for by her. She also said not a single dollar from the
account spent by the grandmother was used to benefit Hunt.

Hunt didn’t disclose the amount of the bond, but said it was enough to make her life easier and send her to college.

Also in 2018, Hunt said she came across a bond with
Auto-Owners Insurance Company, based in Montgomery, which was worth the
value of the conservatorship. The bond acts as an insurance policy in
the event of funds being mishandled by the conservator.Hunt
said she contacted the insurance company and was told it expired when
she turned 19 years old. Hunt filed a claim with the insurance company
in August 2018.

Just before a claim was filed with the insurance
company, Agricola filed a motion to move the matter from the probate
office to the Chambers County Circuit Court in Judge Isaac Whorton’s
courtroom in July 2018.

In December 2018, Hunt filed a motion to request the
insurance agency pay the full amount of the bond because of the misuse
of funds by Hunt’s grandmother while in charge of the conservatorship.

During a hearing in March 2019, the insurance agency
failed to appear in court, and the court ordered the insurance agency
to pay proceeds of the bond to Hunt.

Agricola said from Hunt’s standpoint, the case is
over, but the lack of accounting and inventory from the probate’s office
in this case could mean there are potentially other cases with similar
stories.

“If it wasn’t done in her case, it is likely it wasn’t done in many other cases,” she said.

Agricola said it is possible the insurance company
could have an action against the county regarding this matter, but she
has no knowledge if the company is doing so.

Auto-Owners Insurance declined comment to the Valley Times-News.

From 2001 to 2018, John Crowder, Cary Baldwin and
Easlick served as probate judge in Chambers County. Current Probate
Judge Paul Story was elected in November 2018 and assumed the office in
January 2019.

Hunt said Thursday that Chambers County is her home, and she was astounded by the negligence shown by the probate office.

“There needs to be a level of accountability and
trust with those elected positions of power,” she said. “It is our job
as citizens of this county to conduct oversight of these powers to even
that scale of justice.”

Hunt said it is the job of the law to protect the
people, and it was probate judge’s job to help her, even if the previous
administrations didn’t do their jobs correctly.

“Once you are elected into that position, you need
to make the difference,” she said. “Elected officials should show
diligence and presence, not negligence and self-indulgence.”

Story said he wouldn’t comment on the actions of
past judges or how they operated the office, but he did say when a
conservatorship is set up, there is supposed to be a measure of
accountability on that account.

He said when a conservator is first set up, there is
supposed to be legal counsel for the conservator and the ward, or
person the account is for. He also said there is supposed to be
inventory and accounting done of the account within the first 60 to 90
days. After that period, Story said another round of accounting is
required a year afterward. After the first year, he said accounting is
required no more than at least once every three years. He said the judge
has the discretion to order accounting every year or every three years,
depending on the history on the conservator.

“I can’t speak for any other probate judges in this
county or any other county, but that is the way it should be done and
that is the way it is being done now,” Story said.

He said the probate judge can order and request
accounting be done, but the office cannot force the conservator to
provide documents. Story said the probate office can hold a conservator
in contempt of court and attempt to get the accounting done, but the
action is solely on the conservator to make happen.

If accounting does occur and the probate judge does
see a problem, the office conveys those issues to the lawyer of the
conservator and the ward. If the ward has a lawyer, that person can
petition to have the conservator removed.

He said if there is no follow up after the
conservatorship is set up, the probate office would never know of any
improprieties occurring.

“We can’t force them,” Story said. “We only have certain legal ability that we can use to get the inventory and accounting.”

Hunt, who is now married and a mother to a
four-month-old daughter, Amelia, said she was very close to her
grandmother while she was alive, which made the knowledge of her actions
even harder. She said the money she was awarded in March doesn’t change
how she remembers her.

“At the end of the day, it is hard knowing my own
grandmother did that to me,” she said. “But no amount of money will ever
get her and my father back here.”

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